36 Mich. 320 | Mich. | 1877
The question on this record arises under the statute ofi frauds. The case made by the plaintiffs below was rested on the testimony of Charles Merritt and Ered E. Bemingtom Merritt testified that “in the month of May, 1S74, he was acting as agent for the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs had a chattel mortgage against a saw-mill owned by a firm known as Medlar Brothers, and that he called upon said Medlar Brothers for pay. The Medlar Brothers said they were sawing' lumber for the defendants, and if the plaintiffs would extend the time of payment on the said mortgage, the said Medlar Brothers would allow the defendants to retain the sum of fifty cents per thousand for each thousand feet of lumber they would saw for the defendants, and the defendants should pay it to the plaintiffs, to which he, the said Merritt, agreed. He and the Medlar Brothers then went to. the office of the defendants and Ered E. Bemington was present, and there it was agreed between all the parties that the plaintiffs should extend the time for payment of their mortgage during the next sawing season; that the Medlar Brothers should allow the defendants to retain the sum of fifty cents on each thousand feet of lumber that should thereafter be sawed for them by the Medlar Brothers, and the defendants should pay the same to the plaintiffs to apply on the said mortgage which they held against the Median
Remington, who was one of the defendants, gave testimony tending to prove that he was one of the defendants; that he made an agreement with the Medlar Brothers and the plaintiffs, as stated by the last witness; that the Medlar Brothers sawed lumber for the defendants afterwards, and he charged them upon a book fifty cents on each thousand feet so sawed, while he kept the books.
Three principal objections are taken to the recovery which has been had in this case: First, that the agreement proved was void for want of consideration; second, that it was void under the statute of frauds because not reduced to writing; and third, that conceding the agreement to be valid, defendants could only be responsible under it for such moneys due the Medlar Brothers as, they should retain in their hands; and in this case they offered, but were not allowed, to show that they retained nothing. These objections will be considered in their order.
I. The defect in the consideration is supposed to be, tliat there was no agreement to extend payment for any -definite time. In Rolle’s Abridgment, 27 Pl., 45, it is laid down that “if A be indebted to B in one hundred pounds, and B is about to commence a suit for the recovery thereof, but C, a stranger, comes to him and says that if he will forbear him he himself will pay it, this is a good consideration for the promise; B averring that he had abstained and forebore to sue A, et ad huno did abstain and forbear; though no certain time be appointed for the forbearance; for it seems a perpetual forbearance shall be intended, the which he hath performed. So if he will forbear paululum iempo.ris, this is good; plaintiff averring a certain time of
II. The second objection seems to be more relied upon. Our statute of frauds declares that “in the following cases, specified in this section, every agreement, contract or promise shall be void, unless such agreement, contract or promise, or some note or memorandum thereof be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by some.
It is true that the promise of defendants was to make payments on the debt of Medlar Brothers, but it is also true that every payment they promised was to apply on an indebtedness that was to accrue against themselves for the sawing that should be done for them by the Medlar Brothels from time to time. Their promise was consequently a promise to answer for their own debt, and they took upon themselves no new obligation whatever. It has already been determined that the promise was made on a sufficient consideration, namely, the agreement to forbear foreclosure. But while in most cases of similar promises to be found in the books the benefit of the forbearance was expected to accrue to the debtor himself, in this case it is very evident the defendants entered into the arrangement for their own advantage, and that they promised to' pay nothing for which they should not receive an equivalent in services performed for them. In other words, there was a consideration moving to them, which was the inducement to their making the promise. In many cases the test whether a promise is or is not within the statute of frauds is to be found in the fact that the original debtor does or does not remain liable on his undertaking; if he is discharged by a new arrangement made on sufficient consideration, with a third party, this third party may be held on his promise though not in writing ; but if the original debtor remains liable" and the promise of the third party is only collateral to his, it will in strictness be nothing more than a promise to answer for the other’s debt. But where the third party is himself to receive the benefit for which his promise is exchanged, it is not usually material whether the original debtor remains liable or
The exact point has not hitherto been presented for adjudication in 'this state. In Brown v. Hazen, 11 Mich., 219, & verbal promise by the defendant to pay to the plaintiff a debt owing to him from a third person was held to be within the statute, there being no consideration moving from the plaintiff to the defendant. There.is some discussion of the general subject in Gibbs v. Blanchard, 15 Mich., 292, but it has no very direct bearing. We think the authorities support the judgment.
III. The question which remains is, whether if the defendants, before suit was brought, had - paid over to Medlar Brothers all that was due for the sawing, this would discharge them from their promise to the plaintiffs. If it would, it must be on the ground that, they were liable only while they were the debtors of Medlar Brothers, and because of their indebtedness, which in connection with their promise would in effect make them the custodians of a fund set apart for application to the plaintiff’s demand. But we think it became their duty under their promise to observe it by withholding from Medlar Brothers the proportion of their bill which they had agreed to pay to the plaintiffs; and that they could not discharge themselves by a disregard of their promise. It- is a paradox to say that a promise is valid, but that the promisor may relieve himself from its obligations by violating it.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.